Summary The Beech A100 King Air, serial number B-103, departed Ottawa MacDonald-Cartier International Airport at 0830 eastern daylight saving time on an instrument flight rules (IFR) training flight to North Bay, Ontario, with two flight crew on board. At North Bay, the crew conducted a radar-vectored back-course approach to runway 26 with a touch-and-go landing followed by two visual flight rules touch-and-go landings, then a full-stop landing. The flight crew switched seat positions in the aircraft and departed on a return IFR flight to Ottawa. At Ottawa, when the landing gear was selected down, the crew observed an unsafe landing gear indication in the cockpit and requested and received overshoot instructions from air traffic control. Visual observation from the ground during the overshoot confirmed the landing gear was not extended. The flight crew carried out the emergency landing gear extension procedure, but still observed an unsafe landing gear position indication for the right main landing gear; however, the landing gear appeared to be extended when observed from the ground. The flight crew discussed how the landing would be carried out, requested emergency rescue services for the landing, and proceeded to land on runway 25. On the landing roll, the right main landing gear collapsed and the aircraft went off the right side of the runway. There were no injuries. The accident occurred during the hours of daylight in visual meteorological conditions. Ce rapport est galement disponible en franais. Other Factual Information As the aircraft decelerated on the landing roll and the supported weight of the aircraft transferred from the wings to the landing gear, the right main landing gear began to collapse. The number two engine propeller, right wing trailing edge flap, and right wing tip contacted the ground when the landing gear fully collapsed. The aircraft veered to the right, went off the right side of the runway onto the grass infield area of the airport, and came to rest on a northerly heading, 3 000 feet from the threshold of runway 25. The runway, an asphalt surface 8 000 feet long by 200 feet wide, was bare and dry at the time. The weather at the time of the occurrence was scattered cloud at 25 000 feet , a visibility of five miles in haze, with a temperature of 29 degrees Celsius, and a dew point of 22 degrees Celsius. The wind was from 210 degrees magnetic at eight knots. The flight crew was certified and qualified in accordance with existing regulations to conduct the flight. The pilot in command had flown 20 hours and the co-pilot 15 hours in the last 90 days, all on type. Aircraft records indicated the aircraft was certified and equipped in accordance with existing regulations and approved procedures. The aircraft was originally equipped with an electrically-operated landing gear retraction and extension system. The circuit breaker used to protect the electric motor that operated the electric landing gear system was a 120-amp circuit breaker. As a result of reported electrical fires associated with the electric motor, Airworthiness Directive 95-13-03 was issued instructing operators of the aircraft to replace the 120-amp circuit breaker with a 60-amp breaker. Aviadesign Incorporated, an American company, developed and had approved a supplemental type certificate (STC), SA 4013WE, to allow the landing gear on the Beech A100 aircraft to be modified from electric operation to hydraulic operation. In February 1996, the occurrence aircraft was modified in accordance with the STC, using the same type of electric motor and the same rated 60-amp circuit breaker to operate the hydraulic pump. An STC does not require consultation with or endorsement by the aircraft manufacturer. During normal operation of aircraft equipped with Aviadesign STC hydraulic landing gear, the nose and main landing gear are retracted and extended by hydraulic actuators, which receive hydraulic fluid under pressure from an electrically-driven pump. The electric motor for the hydraulic pump is protected by a 60-amp circuit breaker located on the aircraft cockpit floor between the pilot seats. On the accident aircraft, the 60-amp circuit breaker was located on the floor at the front of the aircraft passenger cabin, recessed for protection, and not accessible by the pilots from the cockpit. (The Transport Canada, Aircraft Services Directorate (ASD), standard operating procedures (SOPs) for the Beech A100 King Air aircraft generally do not permit pilots in flight to reset circuit breakers with values as high as 60 amps.) System pressure is maintained by a pressure switch, which cycles the electric motor on and off via a relay. The hydraulic system incorporates a nitrogen-charged accumulator to prevent spike pressures and to provide a hydraulic cushion within the system. An amber light in the cockpit illuminates and remains illuminated when electric power is applied to the hydraulic pump motor. All three landing gear are held in the retracted position by system hydraulic pressure. A red light in the landing gear selector handle is illuminated any time the landing gear is in transit. Extinguishing of the red light with the landing gear selector handle in the gear-up position indicates that the landing gear is fully retracted. The nose landing gear hydraulic actuator has an internal lock that provides a positive downlock for the nose landing gear. Mechanical over-centre downlocks located on the main landing gear drag braces provide downlocks for the main landing gear. Individual green light indicators in the cockpit illuminate when the respective landing gear is fully down and locked. Illumination of all three green lights and extinguishing of the gear in-transit light with the landing gear selector handle in the down position indicate the landing gear is fully extended and locked in the down position. If the landing gear is not down and locked and either or both engine power levers are retarded below an engine setting sufficient to maintain flight, a warning horn will sound intermittently. In the event the landing gear fails to extend by the normal method, extension of the landing gear is accomplished by the flight crew actioning the Landing Gear Emergency Extension Checklist. The checklist instructs the crew to slow the aircraft to 120 knots indicated airspeed, manually open the landing gear relay circuit breaker located in the cockpit, and select the landing gear handle to the landing gear down position. The pilots rotate the manual hydraulic vent valve and the emergency gear extension nitrogen valve(1) to the full open position and check that all three green landing gear lights are illuminated. The manual hydraulic vent and nitrogen valves are located on the aircraft cockpit floor between the two pilot seats. Several counterclockwise rotations are required to fully open each valve. The valves rotate with little or no resistance. When the hydraulic vent valve is fully open, all three landing gear free fall to the extended position. When the nitrogen valve is fully open, pressure from a nitrogen bottle forces the main landing gear beyond the over-centre locks to lock the landing gear in the down position. Maximum pressure in a fully charged nitrogen bottle is 1 500 pounds per square inch (psi). The normal landing gear extension system cannot be operated after the emergency system has been activated until the landing gear system has been returned to normal by maintenance personnel on the ground. When the aircraft was examined at the accident site, the landing gear handle was in the down position, the landing gear relay circuit breaker was open, and both the hydraulic landing gear vent and the nitrogen valves were in the full open position. The nitrogen gauge was indicating 800 psi, which would be normal following bottle use. The 60-amp circuit breaker for the landing gear hydraulic pump electric motor was open. As the right wing of the aircraft was raised off the ground during recovery after the accident, the right main landing gear extended and locked in the down position. The aircraft was then towed to the hangar and placed on aircraft jacks. The landing gear hydraulic and emergency extension systems were returned to normal. The 60-amp hydraulic pump electric motor circuit breaker and the landing gear relay circuit breaker were reset, and the landing gear was cycled in the normal mode several times without malfunction. The 60-amp circuit breaker was then opened, and the landing gear was extended by the emergency extension procedure several times without malfunction. It was determined that the landing gear would not free-fall during the emergency extension procedure until the hydraulic vent valve was in the full open position. Subsequent to the normal and emergency landing gear extensions in the hangar, the nitrogen charge for the hydraulic system accumulator was found to be depleted. The accumulator was recharged, and after two days the nitrogen charge was found to be depleted again. The accumulator was dismantled and found to be unserviceable. Damaged and deteriorated O-rings were found leaking at both ends of the accumulator. In accordance with the STC, nitrogen pressure was to be checked every 1 000 hours of aircraft operation or during every major inspection; however, the operator routinely checked the pressure every 200 hours. The nitrogen charge for the accumulator is separate from the emergency landing gear extension system. No other defects were found during examination of the landing gear and landing gear retraction and extension systems.